Evaluating the feasibility of prehospital point‐of‐care EEG: The prehospital implementation of rapid EEG (PHIRE) study

Author:

Guterman Elan L.12ORCID,Mercer Mary P.34,Wood Andrew J.1,Amorim Edilberto1,Kleen Jonathan K.1,Gerard Daniel4,Kellison Colleen3,Yamashita Scott5,Auerbach Benjamin1,Joshi Nikita5,Sporer Karl A.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology University of California San Francisco California USA

2. Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies University of California San Francisco California USA

3. Department of Emergency Medicine University of California San Francisco California USA

4. Emergency Medical Services, City of Alameda Fire Department Alameda California USA

5. Department of Emergency Medicine Alameda Hospital Alameda California USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPoint‐of‐care electroencephalography (EEG) devices can be rapidly applied and do not require specialized technologists, creating new opportunities to use EEG during prehospital care. We evaluated the feasibility of point‐of‐care EEG during ambulance transport for 911 calls.MethodsThis mixed‐methods study was conducted between May 28, 2022 and October 28, 2023. Emergency Medical Services (EMS) clinicians identified eligible individuals, provided emergent treatment, applied EEG, and obtained an EEG recording during ambulance transport. Eligible patients were aged 6 years or older and evaluated for seizure, stroke, or altered mental status. EMS clinicians completed a survey and a brief phone interview following every enrollment. Two epileptologists reviewed EEG recordings for interpretability and artifact.ResultsThere were 34 prehospital encounters in which EEG was applied. Patients had a mean age of 69 years, and 15 (44%) were female. EEG recordings had a median duration of 10 min 30 s. It took EMS clinicians an average of 2.5 min to apply the device and begin EEG recording. There were 14 (47%) recordings where clinicians achieved a high‐quality connection for all 10 electrodes and 32 (94%) recordings that were sufficient in quality to interpret. There were 24 (71%) recordings with six or more channels free of artifact for 5 min or more. All clinicians agreed or strongly agreed that the device was easy to use.ConclusionAmong real‐world prehospital encounters for patients with neurologic symptoms, point‐of‐care EEG was rapidly applied and yielded EEG recordings that could be used for clinical interpretation, demonstrating the feasibility of point‐of‐care EEG in future prehospital care.

Funder

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Publisher

Wiley

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